The EU’s 2024 New Pact on Migration and Asylum was designed to break a long-running policy deadlock—but a new analysis suggests its biggest impact may be institutional, not procedural. Instead of primarily coordinating migration governance through specialist networks, the Pact appears to have shifted decision-making toward high-level political bargaining among member states.
For years, disagreements over burden-sharing and border management repeatedly stalled reforms. The 2015 migration crisis exposed structural weaknesses in the asylum system and intensified divisions, especially around whether and how asylum seekers should be redistributed across countries. Traditional coordination mechanisms—largely driven by Justice and Home Affairs officials—struggled to overcome those political constraints.
In a study published online in JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies, Professor Midori Okabe (Sophia University, Japan) investigated how negotiations surrounding the Pact reshaped EU governance. Rather than treating the Pact as only a ruleset update, the research frames it as a transformation in how EU decisions are negotiated, justified, and ultimately implemented.
Okabe’s approach traces institutional developments and negotiation dynamics using policy documents and existing scholarship, linking the evolution of outcomes to changes in negotiation practice. The analysis highlights a notable movement of decision authority away from expert-led forums and toward political venues involving heads of state and government.
A key mechanism identified is the increasing use of political trade-offs and package deals. Migration bargaining became intertwined with broader dossiers, including border governance and cooperation with non-EU countries, creating cross-policy exchanges intended to secure coalition-like agreement.
The study characterizes this pattern as “transactional diplomacy,” where concessions in one policy domain are leveraged to obtain commitments in another. In practical terms, it means migration policy is treated less as an administrative coordination problem and more as an arena of intra-EU diplomatic exchange.
This reconfiguration may have lasting consequences for European integration. When migration remains politically sensitive, technical coordination may no longer be sufficient, and future crisis responses could depend more heavily on leader-level bargaining than on expert consensus-building.
Ultimately, the Pact’s legacy may be twofold: it not only advanced reform proposals, but also redefined who sets the agenda and how political consensus is constructed inside the EU. That institutional shift could determine how solidarity is interpreted and operationalized in coming migration challenges.
Subject of Research: Not available
Article Title: Reconfiguring European Union Migration Governance: From Technocratic Policy Harmonisation to Transactional Diplomacy Under the 2024 Pact on Migration and Asylum
News Publication Date: 17-May-2026
Web References: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/jcms.70129
References: 10.1111/jcms.70129
Image Credits: Credit: Professor Midori Okabe from Sophia University, Japan
Keywords: European Union; Migration governance; New Pact on Migration and Asylum (2024); Transactional diplomacy; Technocratic coordination; Political bargaining; Asylum policy; Border management; Intra-EU diplomacy; JCMS

